If you have zero resources, this is exactly how I would proceed. Especially without technical skills.

1.) Go to tomodo.com
2.) Skin the growthhacker.tv site. with your own graphics.
3.) Manually reach out to people on letslunch.com who are developers and show them mockups of your site that you've built on tomodo and ask for advice. Do this 3 times and collect their feedback.
4.) Keep talking to developers until you find one that is as amped about building your site as you are.

5.) If you book me, I can walk you through more trips and tactics as a non-tech person.

There's never a substitute for building your product and talking to customers.

If you're not well versed in growth hacking, let's talk.

Depending on your market, there's a variety of algorithmic ways to pursue customers and hundreds of API's to power the pursuit.

The one insight I have here that isn't often mentioned is the number of high fidelity backlinks per an hour that you're able to produce.

If you use http://ahrefs.com you'll notice that the highest growth ventures have a strong correlation with backlinks. (Causality is difficult to identify, but correlation isn't. ) The internet was built for land-grab tactics.

I'd talk to entrepreneurs and creators of high tech textiles in the USA. Look specifically at http://titintech.com and Klymit jacket. Reach out to those founders and learn as much as possible. Both of them are really nice guys and might be better equipped to share horror stories as well.

I can honestly say that Kumar spread more knowledge in 5 minutes than Sean Ellis did in 1 hour. This guy has navigated the gauntlet from the bottom up--no mentors, no program, no marketing team can compare. Can't code (doesn't need to), because he's vicious at his sales skill-set and an engineer's engineer. This guy *will* grow your company.

Call with Kumar was really great. In less than a few minutes of listening to the concept that I am working on, he had interesting insights that I hadn't considered. He gave concrete next steps on what I can do. He also followed-up with 2 emails with other ideas to consider. On the whole, a great call!

Had the chance to connect with Kumar through a friend of mine who saw that we were in a similar space/business. Kumar was very knowledgable and was able to introduce a new MFG method that may turn out to be very beneficial for us. I would have no problem working with or referring Kumar now or in the future.

Kumar was a pleasure to work with this past summer in silicon valley. His business and professional skills, as well as willingness and ability to learn complicated new technical topics, not to mention general hustle and initiative was a valuable addition to the team and the company. I highly recommend him to any venture seeking a business development candidate with growing technical proficiency.